tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2654707306721822289.post7878137135497679163..comments2024-03-20T13:19:13.512-11:00Comments on TATTERED AND LOST PHOTOGRAPHS: Seriously, WHAT WERE THEY THINKING?Tattered and Losthttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00208918251232477186noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2654707306721822289.post-60408544366353912722009-01-25T19:32:00.000-11:002009-01-25T19:32:00.000-11:00You're onto something. I'd forgotten how film sat ...You're onto something. I'd forgotten how film sat in cameras all year and then some. Everyone was so cautious how they used those precious shots and those weird flashbulbs. What's really interesting in this shot is the fact that a flash was used but it's not bouncing off the screen. Just a hint of it in the upper corner. Maybe it wasn't a flash and this was a professional shot done in their home with lights strategically placed. When I do an inverse of the tv screen I can almost make out a figure crouching in front of the boy. Yup, considering the actual size of the print I think this might have been "professional".Tattered and Losthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00208918251232477186noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2654707306721822289.post-72071577623808778502009-01-25T13:02:00.000-11:002009-01-25T13:02:00.000-11:00I think the little guy begged for his picture to b...I think the little guy begged for his picture to be taken. He was SO proud of having one of the first television sets. His parents, of course, did not want to use a flash bulb up on something that was not Christmas. People usually didn't take pictures but once or twice a year. This one picture, of the proud boy, was going to through them off. and of course the boy wouldn't see the picture developed for another 6 months, a least.<BR/>OR.. it's all about the pics on top of the T.V. Think about that.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com